Author's Notes

Lead Ladies Unroll the Star, Passing Right, Cross the Set, Gather a Circle

B1:

Circle Left [1x]

Neighbor Swing

B2:

Men Allemande Left 1 1/2

Partner Swing

Notes:
(1) The Ladies on the right end of each line of four in A1A lead the
figure in A2B. I call them the "Lead Ladies." Note that due to the
alternation of roles, the ladies who don't lead the first time through
will lead the next time through.

(2) Have everyone make note of the direction they face at the start of
the dance. The men end *every* swing facing this direction. That's
easier to explain than the direction the ladies need to face.

(3) The figure in A2B is somewhat difficult to explain in words, but
flows smoothly. The Lead Ladies start pretty much facing each other
from their respective stars. They pass right shoulders, with everyone
in their stars following in single-file lines. Everyone in each line
passes all the people in the other line by the right shoulder. After
passing right shoulders, the Lead Ladies curl around the tail of the
other single file line to walk the path of a circle left. (I'm told
that Kathy Anderson has the lead ladies start forming a circle
immediately, by taking the hand of their neighbor.) The A2B figure
ends when the trailing man crosses the set to take his place
completing the circle of four people. At that moment, the Lead Ladies
will have just completed walking about 3/4 of a circular path and be
near each other again.

(4) In B1A, everyone must walk a full circle. The Lead Ladies may be
tempted to circle only half-way, as they feel like they've already
circled at least half-way. The men must ensure that the circle turns
far enough so that they can swing in their original lines of four. It
might make it easier to say that the men end every move in their
original lines through B1. Only their last swing takes place in their
progressed lines.

(5) I lifted the main figure from a four-couple English set dance
called by Mike Richardson (The Short and the Tall, by Ron Coxall). It
had the stars unroll, cross the set, form stars with the opposite
hands, star, and unroll to cross back, and called that figure The
Devil's Elbow. I immediately saw a need to cast that figure into a
four-face-four formation. It "only" took me 3 years to get the
inspiration of forming a circle on the other side of the set instead
of a second star. The rest of the dance fell into place easily. I
had in mind to name dances after places near where I live, so I chose
the obvious feature near Austin, a ridge of hills just north of the
town of New Braunfels. I've since discovered that many places share
the name.